UN: $16.4 billion needed to aid most vulnerable

The United Nations (UN) appealed yesterday for US$16.4 billion to pay for global humanitarian needs in 2015, saying it needs that money to help 57.5 million of the world's most vulnerable people.

More than 40 per cent of the appeal, US$7.2 billion, would go to help 18.2 million people suffering from the war in Syria.

The 2015 request on behalf of 455 aid organisations does not include money to help feed the millions facing hunger in Africa's Sahel region, which has seen repeated droughts and other crises. That appeal is being launched in February.

The UN agencies and their partners say the aid needs for 2014 swelled to US$17.9 billion in 31 countries but that they were only able to muster US$9.4 billion, or 52 per cent of it, from donors. That has left US$8.5 billion in unmet needs, many of which have been rolled over into 2015.

Valerie Amos, the UN's humanitarian chief and emergency coordinator, said aid in 2014 helped avert a famine in South Sudan, fed millions of Syrians each month, provided medical supplies to one million Iraqis, and paid for food for 903,000 people in Central African Republic.

But with 80 per cent of the needy in conflict-ridden countries, the demands for aid are outstripping the ability to pay for them, Amos said. As of November 30, there were an estimated 102 million people in need of aid around the world, of which 76 million are considered particularly vulnerable, she said.